4.4 C
London
Saturday, April 20, 2024
HomeBusinessVodafone plans $1.65bn investment to fully own India unit

Vodafone plans $1.65bn investment to fully own India unit

Date:

Related stories

India seeks carbon tax exemption in trade talks: report

INDIA is pressing for an exemption from the UK’s...

Infosys Q4 net soars 30 per cent, revenue up 1.3 per cent

INDIAN IT services major Infosys has said its consolidated...

New Asda for Salisbury approved by Wiltshire council

PLANS for a new Asda in Salisbury have been...

Public has pessimistic view on AI, 52% are nervous of using it: Study

The annual Stanford AI Index Report 2024 highlights several...

Airtel to merge Sri Lanka operations with Dialog Axiata

BHARTI AIRTEL and Dialog Axiata are set to merge...

BRITISH mobile phone giant Vodafone said on Tuesday (October 29) it was seeking regulatory approval to take full control of its Indian unit for $1.65bn (£1.02bn), after New Delhi relaxed foreign ownership rules in the sector.

 

Vodafone, the second biggest carrier in India, said it has filed an application with India’s foreign investment panel to raise its stake in its local unit from 64.38 per cent.

 

Vodafone said increasing its stake to 100 per cent would cost 101.41 billion rupees ($1.65bn), as it seeks to increase its share of the world’s second-largest cellular market in terms of subscribers after China.

 

“We have always said we would like to increase our holding in the business and this further investment demonstrates Vodafone’s long-term commitment to India,” the company said in a statement.

 

Vodafone, which is embroiled in a $2bn (£1.24bn) tax row with the Indian government, also said it may consider providing “additional funding” by subscribing to shares of the subsidiary, without giving more details.

 

The government in July relaxed rules on foreign holdings in the telecoms sector to allow companies such as Vodafone to own 100 per cent of their local businesses, up from 74 per cent.

 

The move to attract much-needed foreign investment comes as the embattled Congress-led government struggles to kickstart sluggish economic growth, which hit a decade-low last year.

 

Indian businessmen Ajay Piramal of Piramal Enterprises and Analjit Singh of Max India are currently the other shareholders of Vodafone India.

 

Revenues of Vodafone India, which has about 155 million subscribers, grew 13.7 per cent to 93.62 billion rupees in the quarter ended June.

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

five × 4 =